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Distributed Data and Grid Computingfor Inquirybased Science Education
and OutreachEric Myers
LIGO Hanford Observatory
Hanford, Washington
“BOINC in Research, Science, and Education”1st East Coast BOINC Meeting
University of Delaware29 August 2008
LIGOG08xxxx00G
Parsing the title...
1. Distributed Data – real data, from LIGO, a cuttingedge physics experiment to detect gravitational waves, and (eventually) to use them for a new kind of astronomy
2. Grid Computing – distributed supercomputing (using VDS and Swift rather than BOINC)
3. Inquirybased education – project oriented, investigative,4....and outreach informal education too
But first, a word from our sponsor....
Distributed Data1 and Grid Computing2
for Inquirybased Science Education3 and Outreach4
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Michelson Interferometer
Measuring ∆L in arms allows the measurement of the strain
h = ∆L/L,
which is proportional to the gravitational wave amplitude h(t). (Larger L is better, and multiple reflections increase effective length.)
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Laser Interferometer Gravitational wave ObservatoryLIGO Livingston Observatory (LLO)
Livingston Parish, Louisiana
L1 (4km)
LIGO Hanford Observatory (LHO)
Hanford, Washington
H1 (4km) and H2 (2km)
Funded by the National Science Foundation; operated by Caltech and MIT; the research focus for ~ 500 LIGO Scientific Collaboration members worldwide.
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Educational use of LIGO PEM data● LIGO interferometers are ultrahigh precision optical instruments!● Operation requires careful monitoring of the physical environment of
the instruments (including seismic activity, weather, magnetic fields...)● PEM data (and data products derived from them, such as DMT BLRMS
seismic channels) can be used by students for inquirybased learning projects: LHO/Gladstone HS SST Program (19992001) LIGO/QuarkNet/I2U2 partnership (2005 )
PEM = “Physics Environment Monitoring”
DMT = “Data Monitoring Tools”
BLRMS = “Bandwidth Limited RMS”
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LHO/Gladstone SST program
A partnership between LIGO Hanford Observatory and Gladstone High School (near Portland, OR), supported in part by the Student, Scientist, Teacher (SST) program run by Pacific Northwest National Lab (PNNL)
One teacher and three students spent 8 weeks at LHO in summers 1999, 2000, and 2001 Science classes during school year involved a variety of projects aimed at understanding PEM seismic data transfered to GHS via Internet (using FTP).
The students who had hands-on experience from the summer internship were a key resource.
Students met with a LIGO scientist via telecon every 3 weeks, and they all visited the LHO site once during year.
Students built “demo” instruments which gave them hands-on experience with equipment without risk of breaking something.
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Longterm microseism connection to oceanwave activity
Seasonal trend in microseism identified in early analysis (below) agrees qualitatively with oceanbuoy waveheight data (right)
1.00E08
1.00E07
1.00E06
1.00E05
10/17/99 12/6/99 1/25/00 3/15/00 5/4/00 6/23/00
LVEA XLVEA YLVEA ZMIDX XMIDX YMIDX ZMIDY XMIDY YMIDY ZENDX XENDX YENDX ZENDY XENDY YENDY ZWave Height*1e07
Wave height can be used as a “proxy” to predict overall long-
term microseism activity at Hanford.
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QuarkNet
QuarkNet is a teacher education project, funded by NSF and DOE, and run by the Fermilab office of Science Education
➔ Provides longterm professional development for highschool physics teachers through research experience, workshops, and sustained support.
➔ Teachers are paired with physicist mentor from one of ~50 QuarkNet Centers at Universities and National Labs.
QuarkNet created the “Cosmic Rays eLab”:➔ Distributed array of 200+ cosmic ray detectors, in classrooms➔ Students manage Data Acquisition (DAQ) and upload data to a
central server➔ Students can use data from entire cluster in analyses, which run on
The Grid (originally under VDS, now under Swift)
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“Interactions In Understanding the Universe”
QuarkNet organizers sought to extend the idea, and so invited large physics experiments to join the effort:
ATLAS, CMS, LIGO, STAR, Mariachi,with Adler Planetarium, U. Chicago
Aimed at leveraging Grid Computing for educational use Inquirybased education projects (called “eLabs”) which use real
data from cuttingedge physics experiments Title of project is “Interactions in Understanding the Universe” (I2U2) Initial pilot funding from NSF for 20052006, extended for 20062007.
Three year grant starting 2008.
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Einstein@Home• Searching through the data streams for evidence of gravitational waves
from a periodic source at an arbitrary sky position requires an extremely large amount of computing power more than existing Beowulf clusters!
• Einstein@Home uses the Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing (BOINC) to perform the search on a “small” chunk of data on a volunteer’s PC, all while displaying a mesmerizing screensaver.
Anybody can join: http://einstein.phys.uwm.edu/
Web site includes discussion “forums” for interaction between users, and with project scientists “Outreach”
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LIGO I2U2 Software Goals• Provide easy access to LIGO environmental data (seismometers,
magnetometers, tiltmeters, and weather stations)• Provide webbased analysis tool with functionality and feel similar to
those available to scientists in the LIGO control rooms (such as DMT, DTT, DataViewer, ilog)
• Provide interface for use of “Grid” computing to analyse the data.• Provide supporting tools for interaction and collaboration between
students, teachers, eLab developers, and possibly LIGO scientists (vis. SST and Einstein@Home)
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Bluestone – LIGO Analysis ToolA web based Analysis Tool which has a user interface (adjustable!) similar to LIGO control room tools (DMT, DTT, & ROOT) and with the potential to provide much of the same functionality (with influences from LabView)
Tutorial available as a PDF file
Try it out:
http://pirates.spyhill.net/tla_test
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Bluestone Plot
Dec 26 2004 Tsunami
earthquake, detected at LHO
ROOTvia webinterface
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Electronic Logbook
LIGO electronic logbook (the "ilog"). http://ilog.ligowa.caltech.edu/ilog
( reader / readonly )
I2U2 Prototype site:I2U2 Prototype site: http://www13.i2u2.orgDiscussion / Logbook, based on BOINC forums+ File attachments+ Keyword classifications
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Web site features
Project glossary, using same software that runs Wikipedia,but with singlesignon
RSS News subscription for project/server status
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Teacher Activities
● Teacher workshops at LHO in 2006, 2007, 2008● LIGO eLab in use in classrooms in Washington and Indiana
Summer 2006 internteacher John Kerr
Teacher workshop, August 2006
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• The inquirybased approach does not have answers in the back of the book, or rigid evaluation criteria
• Teacher is no longer in primary role as an authority• I2U2 addresses National Science Standards (based on process), while
teachers pay more attention to State standards (based on content)• Many teachers are “digital immigrants” while students are “digital natives”• Teachers and administrators may be afraid of Internet. (“Wikipedia is Evil”)
• Every school district has it's own firewall policy and whitelist (doesn't scale)
• Privacy laws may prohibit sharing of student identifying information, maybe even just names, even for scientific collaboration
• Many technical challenges in a collaboration of collaborations...
Why it won't work Key Challenges:
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How is this related to BOINC?
● Volunteer computing projects can be effective for outreach and informal education, not just computation. This is important!
● BOINC projects might also play a role in formal 912 education. (but you need to make it easy for teachers to do this – they are already too busy)
● Outreach and education activities can bring in more participants more computation!
● Maybe an overlap in our development efforts? Forums: attachments, keywords, access restrictions, etc... Adding a wiki: BOINCAuthPlugin.php for MediaWiki Forums: rooms for classes or research groups (or teams) Membership, ownership, roles, and permissions: generalized
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